Five
Ways To Make your Elevator Pitch Count
TO
PITCH an idea, project or business proposition in five minutes is similar
to asking a candidate explain his goals, ambitions of a lifetime and past
experiences in a job interview. Every second counts, but the ‘elevator
pitch’ can be one of the best rides of your career..
1 Know your Business
Entrepreneur Hitesh Dhingra, ex CEO of online company Letsbuy, insists
that any one who makes an elevator pitch should have thorough knowledge of
his or her trade. The presentation should be within five slides and mailed
a day before. “It helped me get our first seed funding,” he says.
2 Show the Big Picture
To make an elevator pitch
successful, one has to know the market and where the product will stand.
The team should be clear about competition, and the chances of it being
accepted. Numbers have to be on their fingertips, and they need to show the
landscape clearly to the client — for instance, how the numbers will look
in the next few years.
3 Project the Team
A client who will ink a pact
with the team making the pitch needs to know the people behind it. It is
best if the key people on the team are spoken about, says Dhingra. A slide
on the group members, their background and what they bring to the table is
important to instill confidence in the squad.
4 List Out Ideas
Elevator pitches, if done with
help of power point presentations, should have three to five bullet points
in each slide or just a paragraph. Some of the points that one can use to
convince the listener to buy their argument or invest in the company
include: a slide on customer focus, innovation in the product or idea,
sales and a growth trajectory.
5 Keep it Short
In such pitches, there is no time to ramble and one should practice
before going for the meeting. He should practice with teammates and have
all probable questions and responses ready. If the client is bored, one
should sense the mood but not become despondent, because it could be a
technique to test how convinced you are of the product or idea. Clients and
bosses keep an eye out for passion and anyone who loses interest at the
mere thought of failure is ticked off. At the same time, a touch of humour
without losing brevity helps as well.
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Devina
Sengupta shows how ET121211
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